
Improve Your Knees, Feet, Ankles, and Hips
Reduce lower body stiffness
By placing your body at a gentle incline you can release tension from your calves, ankles, knees, and hips all at once.
Target the root cause of aches & pains
Stretch and strengthen the hard-to-reach areas that traditional exercises miss, like your knees, feet, ankles, calves, and hips.
Protect your mobility for years to come
Just a few minutes a day builds lasting strength and flexibility so you can move with confidence.
Noticeable Results in 30 Days
DAY 3
First Signs of Relief
- Joints begin to ache less
- Calves and Achilles start releasing tension
- Daily movements feel more controlled
DAY 14
Movement Gets Easier
- Knees bend and move with less discomfort
- Flexibility improves in ankles and lower legs
- Walking, stairs, and standing feel smoother
DAY 30
Real Mobility Returns
- Joint aches and stiffness dramatically reduced
- Lower body feels stronger and more stable
- Enhanced movement in your activities
Why the Velor Board?
What is it?
Clinic-grade incline board engineered to improve lower-body mobility, restore flexibility, and relieve joint stiffness.
How does it help?
Stretches your calves, hamstrings, Achilles, feet, and knees, increasing flexibility and circulation while reducing pressure on your joints.
How to use it?
Stand on the board for 2–5 minutes a day at a comfortable incline. Use it to stretch, squat, or warm up before activity.
Why the Incline Matters
The Velor Board’s incline design targets the hard-to-reach areas that are key for reducing stiffness, aches, improving mobility, and preventing injuries.
Target KEY Areas that Prevent Injuries
Don't wait for pain to force the reset
By the time you feel pain, damage is already done. Prevent these costly injuries with just 5-10 minutes daily.
Pre-hab beats re-hab-every time
A single PT session can cost $175; five minutes on Velor costs you pennies and saves months of misery.
The best recovery is the one you never need
Every step on the Velor Board activates the injury causing muscles most people ignore until it's too late.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this medically approved or safe for injuries?
The Velor Board is not a medical device and is not intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any condition. It’s designed as a general fitness and mobility tool to help improve flexibility, strength, and movement.
Many people use it to support joint health and reduce stiffness, but if you have an existing injury, recent surgery, or chronic condition, we recommend speaking with your doctor or physical therapist before using it.
When used correctly and progressed gradually, it can be a safe and effective way to build strength and mobility—but it’s important to stay within a pain-free range and follow proper form.
Should knees go over your toes?
Recent research and physical therapy practices show that allowing the knees to move slightly over the toes is actually natural and often necessary for healthy knee movement.
Your knees go past your toes during many everyday activities like walking downhill, climbing stairs, or getting up from a chair. The key is doing it in a controlled way that gradually strengthens the muscles and tendons around the knee.
The Velor Board helps with this by creating a safe, controlled incline that gently loads the knees, ankles, and calves. This helps strengthen the quadriceps, patellar tendon, and surrounding support muscles, which are important for knee stability and long-term joint health.
If you’re new to it, you can always start with smaller movements or partial squats and gradually increase your range as your knees get stronger.
Can beginners safely use the Velor Board?
Absolutely! The Velor Board is designed with adjustable angles, making it suitable and safe for beginners, seniors, and those with limited mobility to easily start gentle, effective stretching.
Who should use a Velor Board?
Our Velor Board is ideal for anyone looking to improve flexibility, relieve joint stiffness, and enhance mobility—especially adults over 50, athletes, or those recovering from injury or surgery.